The Medication Safety Programme aims to greatly reduce the number of New Zealanders harmed each year by medication errors in our hospitals, general practices, aged care facilities and across the entire health and disability sector.

Healthcare associated infection is one of the most frequent adverse events in health care worldwide. Up to 10 percent of patients admitted to modern hospitals in the developed world acquire one or more infections.

An article published in the New Zealand Medical Journal recently, shows that trigger tools are a useful way of measuring and tracking events that result in patient harm in primary care.

Trigger tools are a different approach to error reporting which looks at random samples of patient records, looking for 'triggers' which indicate an error has been made. The information can then be used to improve the quality and safety of health services.

The researchers aimed to establish which trigger tool worked best in their general practice, which triggers were most useful, and whether they could establish a review process that would be practical to use routinely.